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عدد المساهمات : 18994 التقييم : 35488 تاريخ التسجيل : 01/07/2009 الدولة : مصر العمل : مدير منتدى هندسة الإنتاج والتصميم الميكانيكى
| موضوع: بحث بعنوان Dairy Production - Eliminating Foreign Body Contamination and Ensuring Brand Integrity الإثنين 30 نوفمبر 2020, 4:13 pm | |
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أخوانى فى الله أحضرت لكم بحث بعنوان Dairy Production - Eliminating Foreign Body Contamination and Ensuring Brand Integrity
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Introduction 1 Dairy focus: cheese Why dairy production plants need 2 an in-line insurance policy Dairy focus: yoghurt 8 X-ray Inspection in practice - Case Study 9 False positives 4 Conclusion Introduction Contamination of product with foreign objects is a permanent threat to the dairy sector and its implications can be deeply unpleasant, not only for any consumers unfortunate enough to encounter the contaminated goods, but also for the manufacturers themselves. Around the globe, food safety is enforced through a raft of regulation and legislation, with responsibility beginning in the field and ending long after the point of sale. Contamination with foreign bodies (Fig.1) can occur at any of these points; it may come from processing machinery, factories, transportation, or via the addition of nondairy ingredients. This means that in the dairy sector, legal and reputational risk extends to processors, manufacturers and retailers alike, and all have a vested interest in keeping dairy products contaminant-free. For dairy producers that supply major retailers, the risk is particularly acute. This is because those retailers may impose substantial fines or other penalties upon suppliers when contamination with a foreign object occurs. Retailers and food producers have brands to protect and that brand is a lucrative asset. So naturally, they seek to ensure the highest possible standards in the dairy products they provide, particularly if those go out under their own label. The negative publicity via the press or the fast-moving social media landscape can often be nearly as costly to a brand in terms of damaged reputation and lost revenue as that of product recalls. In practice, this means risk-sharing: retailers will often only contract with suppliers if those suppliers adhere to rigorous protocols intended to minimise the risk of contamination. Historically the retailers “Codes of Practice” were very prescriptive in specifying how food producers have to achieve the desired foreign body detection in their plants. However this is now starting to change with retailers increasingly indicating an acceptable quality level and leaving it to food producers to implement the required processes and equipment to meet these standards. This has placed a much greater responsibility on dairy producers to have the expertise required within their facility – or through their supply chain – to ensure suitable foreign body detection systems. Since 1998 all food businesses have been legally bound to have a food safety management system based on the principles of the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) system. This means dairy manufacturers are required to safeguard the quality of their final product by identifying potential hazards and minimising any associated risks, which would include preventing contaminants in products.
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